* 10GB of free hard drive space on a primary partition for a TrueOS or FreeBSD server installation

* Network card

* Network card

Line 23:

Line 23:

* 1024 MB of RAM

* 1024 MB of RAM

−

* 20GB of free hard drive space (if you will be installing KDE, GNOME, or lots of software)

+

* 50GB of free hard drive space on a primary partition for a desktop installation

* Network card

* Network card

Line 30:

Line 30:

* NVIDIA 3D accelerated video card

* NVIDIA 3D accelerated video card

+

+

The PC-BSD installer's hardware check will display a warning message if the selected partition contains less than 20GB for a server installation or less than 50GB for a desktop installation.

You can never have too much RAM, so install as much as you can afford. To play modern video games, you should use a fast CPU. If you want to create a collection of tunes and movies on your computer, you will want a large hard disk drive which can be internal or external.

You can never have too much RAM, so install as much as you can afford. To play modern video games, you should use a fast CPU. If you want to create a collection of tunes and movies on your computer, you will want a large hard disk drive which can be internal or external.

Line 35:

Line 37:

=== Supported Processors ===

=== Supported Processors ===

−

PC-BSD® should install on any system containing a 32-bit (also called i386) or 64-bit (also called amd64) processor. Despite the amd64 name, a 64-bit processor does '' '''not need''' '' to be manufactured by AMD in order to be supported. The {{citelink|url=http://www.freebsd.org/releases/9.1R/hardware.html#PROC|txt=FreeBSD Hardware Notes}} list the i386 and amd64 processors known to work. THIS URL DOES NOT WORK YET

+

PC-BSD® should install on any system containing a 32-bit (also called i386) or 64-bit (also called amd64) processor. Despite the amd64 name, a 64-bit processor does '' '''not need''' '' to be manufactured by AMD in order to be supported. The {{citelink|url=http://www.freebsd.org/releases/9.1R/hardware.html#PROC|txt=FreeBSD Hardware Notes}} list the i386 and amd64 processors known to work.

=== Supported Video Cards ===

=== Supported Video Cards ===

−

Like most open source operating systems, PC-BSD® uses X.org drivers for graphics support. X.org supports many video cards; you can check if your video card is supported at the {{citelink|url=http://www.x.org/wiki/Projects/Drivers|txt=X.org Drivers}} page.

+

Like most open source operating systems, PC-BSD® uses X.org drivers for graphics support. PC-BSD® will automatically detect the optimal video settings for supported video drivers. You can verify that your graphics hardware is supported by clicking the [[Hardware Compatibility]] icon within the installer or by accessing this utility from Control Panel when using [[PC-BSD® Live Mode|Live Mode]]. If this utility shows your video as VESA on a 32-bit system with an older NVIDIA card, you must install and use the legacy driver as described below.

−

+

−

PC-BSD® will automatically detect the optimal video settings for supported video drivers. You can verify that your graphics hardware is supported by clicking the [[Hardware Compatibility]] icon within the installer or by accessing this utility from Control Panel when using [[PC-BSD® Live Mode|Live Mode]]. If this utility shows your video as VESA on a 32-bit system with an older NVIDIA or ATI card, this means that you must install and use the legacy driver as described below.

+

Support for the major graphic vendors is as follows:

Support for the major graphic vendors is as follows:

−

'''NVIDIA:''' if you want to use 3D acceleration, NVIDIA is currently the best supported as there is a native driver for PC-BSD®. An "nVidia settings" icon is included in Control Panel for managing NVIDIA settings. Some older NVIDIA cards on 32-bit systems require an older NVIDIA driver. If you suspect you have one of these cards, select the Hardware-Drivers -> NVIDIA-Legacy drivers [[Desktop_Selection_Screen|during installation]] or afterwards using [[System_Manager#Install.2FUninstall Desktops and System Components | System Manager]].

+

'''NVIDIA:''' if you want to use 3D acceleration, NVIDIA is currently the best supported as there is a native driver for PC-BSD®. If an NVIDIA video card is detected, an "nVidia settings" icon will be added to the Control Panel for managing NVIDIA settings. Some older NVIDIA cards on 32-bit systems require an older NVIDIA driver. If you suspect you have one of these cards, select the Hardware-Drivers ➜ NVIDIA-Legacy drivers [[System Selection Screen|during installation]] or afterwards using '''control panel ➜ [[System Manager#Install/Uninstall Desktops and System Components | System Manager]]'''.

'''Intel:''' as of 9.1, 3D acceleration on most Intel graphics is supported. Due to the current KMS support, you will not be able to switch between the graphical console and a virtual console using Crtl+Alt+F#.

'''Intel:''' as of 9.1, 3D acceleration on most Intel graphics is supported. Due to the current KMS support, you will not be able to switch between the graphical console and a virtual console using Crtl+Alt+F#.

−

'''ATI/Radeon:''' 3D acceleration will not work on ATI or Radeon cards until FreeBSD completes its TTM work (possibly in time for 9.2). You can still use these cards, but you will have to choose the 2D driver, and if that does not work, you will need to resort to using the Vesa driver. Some older ATI cards on 32-bit systems do not support KMS. If you suspect you have one of these cards, select the Hardware-Drivers -> ATI-Legacy package [[Desktop_Selection_Screen|during installation]] or afterwards using [[System_Manager#Install.2FUninstall Desktops and System Components | System Manager]].

+

'''ATI/Radeon:''' 3D acceleration will not work on ATI or Radeon cards until FreeBSD completes its TTM work (possibly in time for 9.2). You can still use these cards, but you will have to choose the 2D driver, and if that does not work, you will need to resort to using the Vesa driver.

−

'''Optimus:''' at this time [https://github.com/Bumblebee-Project/Bumblebee/wiki/FAQ Bumblebee] has not been ported to FreeBSD, meaning that there is no switching support between the two graphics provided by Optimus. The only way to install PC-BSD® is to disable one of the graphics in the BIOS. If the BIOS does not support that option, PC-BSD® is unsupported until switching support becomes available.

+

'''Optimus:''' at this time {{citelink|url=https://github.com/Bumblebee-Project/Bumblebee/wiki/FAQ|txt=Bumblebee}} has not been ported to FreeBSD, meaning that there is no switching support between the two graphics adapters provided by Optimus. Optimus implementations vary, so PC-BSD® may or may not be able to successfully load a graphics driver on your hardware. If you get a blank screen after installation, check your BIOS to see if it has an option to disable one of the graphics adapters or to set “discrete” mode. If the BIOS does not provide a discrete mode, PC-BSD® will default to the 3D Intel driver and disable NVIDIA. This will change in the future when the NVIDIA driver supports Optimus.

=== Wireless Cards ===

=== Wireless Cards ===

−

PC-BSD® has built-in support for dozens of wireless networking cards. You can check if your card has {{citelink|url=http://www.freebsd.org/releases/9.0R/hardware.html#WLAN|txt=a FreeBSD driver}}. If it does, it should "just work".

+

PC-BSD® has built-in support for dozens of wireless networking cards. You can check if your card has {{citelink|url=http://www.freebsd.org/releases/9.1R/hardware.html#WLAN|txt=a FreeBSD driver}}. If it does, it should "just work".

+

+

PC-BSD® will automatically detect available wireless networks for supported wireless devices. You can verify that your device is supported by clicking the [[Hardware Compatibility]] icon within the installer or by accessing this utility from Control Panel when using [[PC-BSD® Live Mode|Live Mode]]. If it an external wireless device, insert it before running the Hardware Compatibility utility. If your device is not detected, the [[Wireless Testing]] page has some information about drivers which have not been ported yet. It also contains instructions for converting a Microsoft driver to a FreeBSD kernel module, though results will vary by driver. Known missing wireless drivers are typically for the Broadcom and newer Realtek series of cards.

−

PC-BSD® will automatically detect available wireless networks for supported wireless devices. You can verify that your device is supported by clicking the [[Hardware Compatibility]] icon within the installer or by accessing this utility from Control Panel when using [[PC-BSD® Live Mode|Live Mode]]. If it an external wireless device, insert it before running the Hardware Compatibility utility. If your device is not detected, the [[Wireless Testing]] page has some information about drivers which have not been ported yet. It also contains instructions for converting a Microsoft driver to a FreeBSD kernel module, though results will vary by driver. Known missing wireless drivers are typically in the Broadcom and newer Realtek series.

+

Certain Broadcom devices, typically found in cheap laptops, are quite buggy and can have lockups when in DMA mode. If the device freezes, try switching to PIO mode in the BIOS. Alternately, add the line ''hw.bwn.usedma=0'' to ''/boot/loader.conf'' and reboot to see if that makes a difference.

=== Checking Hardware Compatibility ===

=== Checking Hardware Compatibility ===

−

If you wish to check your hardware before installing PC-BSD®, a good place to start is the {{citelink|url=http://www.freebsd.org/releases/9.0R/hardware.html|txt=FreeBSD 9.1 Hardware Notes}}. URL DOES NOT WORK YET

+

If you wish to check your hardware before installing PC-BSD®, a good place to start is the {{citelink|url=http://www.freebsd.org/releases/9.1R/hardware.html|txt=FreeBSD 9.1 Hardware Notes}}.

Another good resource is to run PC-BSD® in [[PC-BSD® Live Mode|Live Mode]]; that way you can test your various devices before committing to an install.

Another good resource is to run PC-BSD® in [[PC-BSD® Live Mode|Live Mode]]; that way you can test your various devices before committing to an install.

Revision as of 09:53, 26 March 2013

(Sorry for the inconvenience)

Editor: please update template:UseTOC/9.2

Translator: please use {{UseTOC{{putVers}}|TOC}}

Protection (edit): sysopEdited by: Drulavigne

PC-BSD® has moderate hardware requirements and commonly uses less resources than its commercial counterparts. Before installing PC-BSD®, make sure that your hardware or virtual machine at least meets the minimum requirements. To get the most out of your PC-BSD® experience, refer to the recommended system requirements.

Contents

Minimum System Requirements

At a bare minimum, you need to meet these requirements in order to install PC-BSD®:

Pentium II or higher

512 MB RAM

10GB of free hard drive space on a primary partition for a TrueOS or FreeBSD server installation

Network card

Recommended System Requirements

The following are the minimum recommended requirements. The more RAM and available disk space, the better your computing experience:

Pentium 4 or higher

1024 MB of RAM

50GB of free hard drive space on a primary partition for a desktop installation

Network card

Sound card

NVIDIA 3D accelerated video card

The PC-BSD installer's hardware check will display a warning message if the selected partition contains less than 20GB for a server installation or less than 50GB for a desktop installation.

You can never have too much RAM, so install as much as you can afford. To play modern video games, you should use a fast CPU. If you want to create a collection of tunes and movies on your computer, you will want a large hard disk drive which can be internal or external.

Supported Processors

PC-BSD® should install on any system containing a 32-bit (also called i386) or 64-bit (also called amd64) processor. Despite the amd64 name, a 64-bit processor does not need to be manufactured by AMD in order to be supported. The FreeBSD Hardware Notes[1] list the i386 and amd64 processors known to work.

Supported Video Cards

Like most open source operating systems, PC-BSD® uses X.org drivers for graphics support. PC-BSD® will automatically detect the optimal video settings for supported video drivers. You can verify that your graphics hardware is supported by clicking the Hardware Compatibility icon within the installer or by accessing this utility from Control Panel when using Live Mode. If this utility shows your video as VESA on a 32-bit system with an older NVIDIA card, you must install and use the legacy driver as described below.

Support for the major graphic vendors is as follows:

NVIDIA: if you want to use 3D acceleration, NVIDIA is currently the best supported as there is a native driver for PC-BSD®. If an NVIDIA video card is detected, an "nVidia settings" icon will be added to the Control Panel for managing NVIDIA settings. Some older NVIDIA cards on 32-bit systems require an older NVIDIA driver. If you suspect you have one of these cards, select the Hardware-Drivers ➜ NVIDIA-Legacy drivers during installation or afterwards using control panel ➜ System Manager.

Intel: as of 9.1, 3D acceleration on most Intel graphics is supported. Due to the current KMS support, you will not be able to switch between the graphical console and a virtual console using Crtl+Alt+F#.

ATI/Radeon: 3D acceleration will not work on ATI or Radeon cards until FreeBSD completes its TTM work (possibly in time for 9.2). You can still use these cards, but you will have to choose the 2D driver, and if that does not work, you will need to resort to using the Vesa driver.

Optimus: at this time Bumblebee[2] has not been ported to FreeBSD, meaning that there is no switching support between the two graphics adapters provided by Optimus. Optimus implementations vary, so PC-BSD® may or may not be able to successfully load a graphics driver on your hardware. If you get a blank screen after installation, check your BIOS to see if it has an option to disable one of the graphics adapters or to set “discrete” mode. If the BIOS does not provide a discrete mode, PC-BSD® will default to the 3D Intel driver and disable NVIDIA. This will change in the future when the NVIDIA driver supports Optimus.

Wireless Cards

PC-BSD® has built-in support for dozens of wireless networking cards. You can check if your card has a FreeBSD driver[3]. If it does, it should "just work".

PC-BSD® will automatically detect available wireless networks for supported wireless devices. You can verify that your device is supported by clicking the Hardware Compatibility icon within the installer or by accessing this utility from Control Panel when using Live Mode. If it an external wireless device, insert it before running the Hardware Compatibility utility. If your device is not detected, the Wireless Testing page has some information about drivers which have not been ported yet. It also contains instructions for converting a Microsoft driver to a FreeBSD kernel module, though results will vary by driver. Known missing wireless drivers are typically for the Broadcom and newer Realtek series of cards.

Certain Broadcom devices, typically found in cheap laptops, are quite buggy and can have lockups when in DMA mode. If the device freezes, try switching to PIO mode in the BIOS. Alternately, add the line hw.bwn.usedma=0 to /boot/loader.conf and reboot to see if that makes a difference.

Checking Hardware Compatibility

Another good resource is to run PC-BSD® in Live Mode; that way you can test your various devices before committing to an install.

While most hardware "just works" with PC-BSD®, it is possible that you will run across a piece of hardware that does not. If you do, you can help improve hardware support for all PC-BSD® users by reporting the problem so that it can be addressed by the developers. It should be remembered that PC-BSD® is really FreeBSD, meaning that any hardware that works on FreeBSD will work on PC-BSD®.